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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1961)
HERALD AND NEWS, aftunith Falls. Or. Monday, October M, lft PACK ptACTUtn ciua&AH "1 look lorward -to ...your iacuiiy for umpiring ..Ability io Jsounc coaching you., Betw.r. coniidence in other... back twmadvewity Tri-City Nine After Help PASCO (API - The Tri-City Braves of the Northwest Baseball League are looking for a major league hookup and may not op erate in 12 unless they get one. M. B. Kirkpatrick. one of the three Anchorage, Alaska, busi nessmen who own the team, said as much over the weekend while disclosing the league has forgiven a debt of nearly J10.000. The debt was incurred, said Kirkpatrick, before his group took over the franchise in I960 League headquarters in Port land is assisting in the effort to obtain a full working agreement for next season, said the Alaskan. The Braves are to advise t h e league's directors by Dec. 11 on their decision to operale or be idle in 1962. ' ...usa.l -to receive personal cjloritication., ...elacincf oi -team ...we a-in'4 building character -fchi year." Taciturn Los Angeles Mentor Firm In Support Of Players DETROIT lUPIl - Bob Wa terfield. the taciturn Los Angeles Hams coach, has come under a barrage of criticism lately, but you have to admire him for the way he supports his players. After Danny Villanueva, the second-year player from New Mexico State missed a 21-yard field goal in the waning minutes of Sunday's 14-13 loss to the De troit Lions, VVaterfield refused lb criticize the young place kicker. "It happened to me once," said Waterfiold, who used to kick, run and pass for the Rams a decade or so ago. "He feels bad enough as it is," Waterfield added. "After all he's human. Only I wish in this case that he wasn't quite that human." Villaneuva, who already had kicked field coals of 38 and 10 yards to help move the Rams within one point of the Lions, stood on the 21-yard line of De troit with a fourth down and three minutes to play. He got off the placement but the ball was wide and the Rams' would-be 16-14 win remained a 14-13 loss. It was the second league game this year that the Rams lost on missed field goal attempts by Vil lanueva. They dropped their open er in Baltimore when the 23-year-old kicker blew two inside the Colts' 30-yard line. Ixis Angeles, with only a win over Pittsburgh in five National Football League games, is tied for last place in the Western Di vision of the NFL with the Minne sota Vikings. The Rams lumped to a 3-n lead on' Villanueva's 38-yarder in the first quarter on a score set up SD Move Said Blessing For LA Rams NEW YORK (IJPIl It didn't start out that way. but when the Chargers shifted their franchise from Los Angeles to San Dicgn ' last year it may have been a bles. sing in disguise for the opposition league Los Angeles Rams. Now with the Chargers still ' the only undefeated team in either! the AFL or NFL it appears owner Barron Hilton did the Rams a favor. The Rams have humbled to four losses in five league games and it's a good ." hel some of their loyalist fans would be d cs e r t i n g to the . Chargers. San Diego won its sixth AFL game in a row Sunday 10 in a : row if you count exhibition games ; with an easy 25-10 victory over the New York Titans, supposedly rated next to the Chargers in overall strength in the league. The game, watched by a crowd of 23.136. largest ever to attend : a Titans' home contest, was well played and fairly close until the ". final quarter when halfback Paul Lowe jumped and scooted 25 ; yards for the final Charger touch j down. - Jack Kemp, the gutty Charger! I quarterback who has been re '. called by the Army to active dut, ; played tne entire game with his : injured shoulder frozen with novo. ; cam and strapped in a protective sling. But the former Occidental col . lege star still passed for 3.12 yards, completing 15 of 38 at. ; tempts and scoring two louch- - downs. SHA Eleven In Command Of B League Sacred Heart (4-1) Tulelakt 2-3) Malin (41) Chiloqufn (3-1-7) Merrill U-J) Bonanza Mm) j j l-TI'f.WffftTfr when Dick Bass took the opening kickoff 64 yards to the Lions 35 Triple Reverse But Detroit, which had been stymied by an improving Los An geles defense, soared into the lead for good on a real razzle-dazzle play in the second period. It was triple handofS, starting and end ing with Lion quarterback Jim Ninowski who then pitched a pass to end Gail Cogdill all alone on the Ram five. Cogdill all but walked over for the touchdown Nick Pietrosante's four-yard run gave Detroit a 14-3 lead but the Rams came right back in the third quarter on a 69-yard pass play from quarterback Frank Ryan to end Red Phillips. Villanueva's second field goal in the final period set the stage for his crucial miss and the clos est Ram loss of the year. County B Foolbill w L Pel. pf pa 2 0 1.000 1M sal 2 I Ml SI 471 2 I Ml lit SO 2 .500 103 .1 1 1 .500 40 U! 0 4 .000 12 1 36 The Sacred Heart Trojans, 2-0 in County B league football, figure to pad their lead this weekend when they tangle with winless Bonanza in the evening game of the Potato Festival doubleheader Saturday at Merrill. In the afternoon contest I h e Merrill Huskies will tangle with the Malin Mustangs for the sec ond time. The first time the two "pet" rivals met this season the Mustangs scored a "non-count ing" Iriumpn. The Saturday Merrill games arc the only ones scheduled in the county loop. Tulelake, which lost to Alturas in a non-counter Friday, is tied for second with Malin, idle this past weekend. Chiloquin, a pre season pick to win the B crown, is settled in third after losing to the Trojans Friday night. An earlier game report in the Herald and News was in error as to the SHA-Chiloquin scoring details, it was learned Sunday. Shan Britton scored one of the Sacred Heart touchdow ns and also counted the conversion. SF Forty-Ninors Spend Long Afternoon Before Kilmer Gets Shotgun Operating The 6-year-old chestnut horse Yastambo, foaled in Argentina, is the son of Yatastn Bamba MINNEAPOLIS L'PI - "Thaf was a long alternoon according tc San Francisco Forty Niner head coach Red Mickey. He was talking about the 38-24 victory over Min nesota here Sunday. San Francisco's shotgun offense sputtered for nearly two periods before Bill Kilmer fired both bar rels to sink the Vikings. Hickey said his offensive line played its best game of the sea son. He particularly commended halfback J. B. Smith, who gobbled key yardage in the Forty Niner touchdown marches. "He is the greatest football player in action today." Hickey said. Halfback Hugh McElhenny. a Forty Niner until Minnesota got him in the National Football League player pool last season, sparked the Vikings in unleash ing an offensive show of their own. Two for flugh He scored twice for the Minne sotans. once on a 13-yard blast around end and again on a 32 yard broken field jaunt on which seven of his old teammates had a shot at him. The "shotgun." triggered by quarterbacks Kilmer, Bob Waters and' John Bro'dic, rolled up 540 yards total offense. Kilmer said his line was "really cracking. They were opening big holes. You just couldn't help but get through." And get through he did. Kilmer carried the ball across the goal line four times, all in the second half. The score was tied 24-24 after three periods, but in the fourth period Hickey's offense was able to move almost at will. Viking coach Norm Van Brock lin said. "It wasn't the defense that hurt us. it was the offensive line. It knocked the blazes out of us." Horses Lacking Van Brocklin said Hickey had the "horses" to work with. "We did all right for quite a while but we just didn't have enough horses to defend against it." Fumbles helped stall San Fran cisco in the first half. In all, the Prospectors lost the ball six times. Viking Rich Mostardi nailed two San Francisco passes to stop twe other thrusts in the first half. San Francisco had hoped to es tablish a modern NFL record of three straight shutouts. Clyde Conner, San Francisco of fensive end. was injured early in the third period. He was taken to Northwestern Hospital in Minneap olis where doctors said he had suf fered a brain concussion. A hospital spokesman said he was in "satisfactory condition." However, it was not known how long he would be hospitalized. Californian Eyes Record US VEGAS. Nev. (AP)-Call-fomian Mickey Wright will get a chance next weekend to become the first woman golfer in history lo win more than 10 tournaments in one year. Miss Wright, the defending la dies PGA champion from San Di ego, got No. 10 Sunday with a nine-stroke victory in the $15,000 ladies' PGA championship here. This week she goes for her 11th win at San Antonio. Tex., scene of the Civitan Tourney. Purdue Aide Takes Charge WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UPI) Assistant coach Bobby Demoss today assumed charge of the Pur due football team following the sudden announcement by head coach Jack Molienkopf that he had asked for a leave of absence. Molienkopf w as granted a leave of absence Sunday to enter Mayo Brothers Clinic at Rochester. Minn., for what his family called a checkup and observation. Molienkopf was scheduled to leave for the hospital this morn ing. A spokesman for the family said he was expected to remain at Mayo Brothers for at least two weeks. The spokesman added: "It Is not serious." Linebacker Bill George of the Chicago Bears is playing his 10th National Football League cam paign. He's from Wake Forest. Raider '11' Broods Over Timely Boot DENVER (UPD-The Oakland Raiders were back in the Ameri can Football League basement to- day, brooding over a field goal with eight seconds remaining in the game that put them there. Denver halfback Jack Hill boot ed the Broncos out of the cellar Sunday with a 27-yard field goal. The kick climaxed a Bronc rally and gave them a 27-24 win. The Broncos thus climbed hand over hand past Oakland in the AFL standings. Denver now has a 2-4 record, while the Raide;s have won one out of five. Denver staged a fourth period rally to overcome a 24-14 Oakland lead. The rush got underway when quarterback Frank Tripucka threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to halfback Al Frazier. Oakland quarterback Tom Flor cs passed 34 yards to Charley Hardy in the end zone to crown a 93-yard Raider march and pro vide the go-ahead score. Golfing Trio Slates Rehash ONTARIO. Calif. (AP - Eric Monti, big Oorge Bayer and voung Bobbv Nichols will pick up where they almost left off dead even when they begin play Thursday in ttte $20,000 Orange County Golf Open at Costa Mesa Monti, of Los Angeles, grabbed $2,800 first money in the Ontario Open Sunday, but had to play two extra holes against Bayer and Nichols and sink an 8-foot birdie putt to wrap it up. The trio hsd tied for first over the regulation 72 holes at 277. Jon Gustin of Gladwyne. Pa., finished fouO i'n 278 and tour nament favorite Gary Player ol South Africa tied for fiflh with Billy Maxwell of Dallas at 280. Other monwinne at Ontario included Dave Hill 22. Jack El lis I28JI, Don Collett '2M, Lloyd Mangrum '284'. 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